Vice President Kamala Harris might be nursing bruises from her loss for the White House in a luxury condo in New York City's Upper West Side after next week, according to sources who saw her husband, Doug Emhoff, scoping a $20,000-a-month residence there last week.
Page Six reported Tuesday that Emhoff, without his wife, toured a three-bedroom unit Friday at the Park Loggia condo building, when he showed up "with a convoy of SUVs and a phalanx of Secret Service."
Harris and Emhoff might be looking for a place on the East Coast so they can have homes in both parts of the country, or even because their home in the Brentwood section of Los Angeles is in the evacuation zone because of wildfires.
The move would put them in the same city as Emhoff's daughter, Ella, who has a place in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn.
According to the New York Times, Harris will be out of public office for the first time in years once she leaves the vice president's mansion in Washington, D.C., and it's not known what lies ahead.
She has "no concrete plans about what to do next or how to proceed as a private citizen for the first time since she was elected San Francisco’s district attorney in 2003," the Times reported.
Her friends are sure that Harris, 60, "will have plenty of options," but they and political allies say it's too soon to "contemplate, let alone plan the next phase of her life."
The Economic Times, however, reported Tuesday that she has several options — if she doesn't just kick back and enjoy the five-star accommodations at the Park Loggia for a while and take a break like Hillary Clinton did after she lost to Trump in 2016.
Harris also could run for president again in 2028, even though she might not be favored after her decisive loss to Trump.
Harris could also run for the Senate in California or for governor.
She also could join a law firm or lobbying group, write a book about her time in the Biden administration, or establish a think tank or advocacy group.
Sandy Fitzgerald ✉
Sandy Fitzgerald has more than three decades in journalism and serves as a general assignment writer for Newsmax covering news, media, and politics.
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